1918 Luders Marine Construction U. S. Army Quartermaster Boat

New arrival

Año:

1918

Longitud:

19m

Tipo de motor/combustible:

Sencilla / diesel

Situado en:

Newport, RI

Material del casco:

Madera

YW#:

78590-2965191

Precio actual:

US$ 76,500 (EUR 72,054)

Farallone (originally Q-9) is the last surviving example of the first 12 boats specifically built for the U. S. Army’s Quartermaster Corps by Luders Marine Construction Company of Stamford, CT in 1918. She is the second oldest Luders-built boat in existence.

Q-9’s existence is due to the changing of the U. S. Army Transport Service from a partially civilian organization to a wholly military one needing its own watercraft, and came about at the moment of major military expansion and the emergence of the United States as a world power. These boats were placed under direct military control and were to be used for transporting material and personnel for the country’s eastern coastal artillery posts.

Q-9 was stationed at Ft. Washington, Maryland until 1923, when she was transferred to the Army War College in Washington, DC to become the Quartermaster General’s personal launch. She was used by two Quartermaster Generals (B. F. Cheatham and Wm. H. Hart) as well as by the Secretary of War, but still carried out her other duties of transporting Infantry and Artillery Corps personnel in the Chesapeake Bay area. On a gentler side, she was loaned yearly to the Women’s Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic for Memorial Day services on the Potomac River.

In 1929 she was shipped on the steamer Marian Otis Chandler out of Norfolk, VA to San Francisco, CA to be used as a utility boat for carrying prisoners and employees to and from the military prison at Alcatraz Island, as well as being used for regular military passenger service. In 1935 Q-9 was transferred to Ft. McDowell on Angel Island and served there as “29-T-873” until the end of World War II in 1945.

After being sold as surplus, Q-9, now renamed Farallone, after the islands off the California coast, was operated on various passenger runs, as a boy Scout boat, and enjoyed a brief career as the first salmon sport fishing party boat out of San Francisco. She was bought and used as a shipyard launch by D. J. Arques in Sausalito, CA until being laid up in 1963.

Farallone was purchased in 1975 in Sausalito where she was being used as a houseboat. She was hauled and restored on a part-time basis over the following thirteen years. She was shipped to Texas in 1993 where fitting out was largely completed. Since then she has cruised the waters of the Gulf Coast, the Bahamas and the U. S. East Coast as a yacht. She was purchased by her current owner, an accomplished ships carpenter, in 2002 and berthed in Newport, RI.

Farallone was built in 1918. Her LOA is 61’; LWL is 60’; beam is 13’4”; draft is 5’4”; her hull is wood. She is powered by a single Detroit Diesel 671-N 200 hp 6 cylinder engine. There are currently 1900hours on the engine.

Construction is long-leaf yellow pine and Douglas fir planking on white oak frames; long-leaf yellow pine and white oak structural keel; white oak floor timbers; galvanized screw and boat nail fastened. The deck is epoxy laminated marine plywood, cloth and epoxy sheathed, and painted. The pilothouse and trunk cabin are of two laminated layers of fir marine plywood built to replicate the original Luders design in shape. Interior ballast consists of 3.5 tons of lead ingots and 2 tons of iron bars.

The Detroit Diesel has a keel cooler, 3:1 twin disc reduction gear, MG509 hydraulics and Morse engine controls at a single steering station. Bronze propeller is 38 x 31on a 3” bronze tail shaft. Cruising speed is 9.5 mph with max speed at 12.5 mph. Range is 3600 miles at 3 gph. There is a 1,040 gallon steel fuel tank and a 250 gallon water tank in Monel. The electrical system is 110V AC/12V DC Marinetics main electrical distribution panel. Included is a Northern Lights 12kW marine heat exchanged diesel generator set with fuel/exhaust system with 2400 hours.

Accommodations include hot water heating through cast iron radiators. A wood stove is also provided. There is one double berth and a single pilot berth. Farallone is equipped with a head; a galley with a double “Polar” stainless steel sink; Par 12V pressure water system; 6 gallon hot water tank; Force 10 three burner stove with oven; icebox with 4” foam insulation; refrigeration system with 12V built-in Marine Air air-conditioning. The interior finish is white enamel and varnish with mahogany and plywood joiner work/trim; varnished tongue-and-groove fir cabin sole.

Ground tackle includes a 125 pound Fisherman anchor as well as a 75 pound Danforth. There are150 feet of ½” anchor chain and many long, heavy braided and nylon rodes and storm lines. Included is an Ideal manual hydraulic windlass (double wildcat, double warping drum).

Farallone is a handsome classic military utility vessel designed and built by the well-known Luders Marine Construction Company. She has been comprehensively rebuilt. She is appealing as a private cruising boat or live-aboard. She is also suitable for a variety of commercial uses.

For more information or to schedule an appointment to view this classic, please contact the Broker at 401-368-1705 or via email at joewalkden@ruddersandmoorings.com.

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The Company offers the details of this vessel in good faith but cannot guarantee or warrant the accuracy of this information nor warrant the condition of the vessel. A buyer should instruct his agents, or his surveyors, to investigate such details as the buyer desires validated. This vessel is offered subject to prior sale, price change, or withdrawal without notice.